Development of ice-shelf estuaries promotes fractures and calving

被引:0
作者
Alexandra L. Boghosian
Lincoln H. Pitcher
Laurence C. Smith
Elena Kosh
Patrick M. Alexander
Marco Tedesco
Robin E. Bell
机构
[1] Columbia University,Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory
[2] Columbia University,Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences
[3] University of Colorado Boulder,Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Science (CIRES)
[4] Brown University,Institute at Brown for Environment and Society
[5] Brown University,Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences
[6] Barnard College,Environmental Science Department
[7] NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies,Institute of Economics
[8] Data Science Institute at Columbia University,undefined
[9] Scuola Superiore Sant-Anna,undefined
来源
Nature Geoscience | 2021年 / 14卷
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摘要
As the global climate warms, increased surface meltwater production on ice shelves may trigger ice-shelf collapse and enhance global sea-level rise. The formation of surface rivers could help prevent ice-shelf collapse if they can efficiently evacuate meltwater. Here we present observations of the evolution of a surface river into an ice-shelf estuary atop the Petermann Ice Shelf in northwest Greenland and identify a second estuary at the nearby Ryder Ice Shelf. This surface-hydrology process can foster fracturing and enhance calving. At the Petermann estuary, sea ice was observed converging at the river mouth upstream, indicating a flow reversal. Seawater persists in the estuary after the surrounding icescape is frozen. Along the base of Petermann estuary, linear fractures were initiated at the calving front and propagated upstream along the channel. Similar fractures along estuary channels shaped past large rectilinear calving events at the Petermann and Ryder ice shelves. Increased surface melting in a warming world will enhance fluvial incision, promoting estuary development and longitudinal fracturing orthogonal to ice-shelf fronts, and increase rectilinear calving. Estuaries could develop in Antarctica within the next half-century, resulting in increased calving and accelerating both ice loss and global sea-level rise.
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页码:899 / 905
页数:6
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